About

22 March 2016

"The Kingsroad" is the second episode of the first season of Game of Thrones.
The episode takes its name from the Kingsroad, a massive road which runs from the Wall to Storm's End.
First mention of Wylla, the alleged mother of Jon Snow.
Cersei told Eddard Stark that she was once pregnant with a child of Robert, but had the child aborted out of hatred for him. Robert was unaware to both the pregnancy and the abortion.

Story –

Tyrion Lannister wakes up hungover and filthy in the
Starks' dog kennel, with his nephew Prince Joffrey Baratheon standing outside
mocking him. Tyrion orders Joffrey to offer his sympathies to their hosts
following Bran Stark's fall. The prince laughs at the idea, and Tyrion slaps
him hard across the face ... several times. Speechless, Joffrey rushes away.

Tyrion joins his brother and sister, Ser Jaime Lannister
and Queen Cersei Baratheon, for breakfast. He tells them that he plans to ride
to the Wall ... and that the maester says that Bran will live. Cersei looks
concerned, but Jaime seems mostly miffed, saying that he'd prefer a good clean
death, rather than living as a crippled grotesque. "Speaking for the
grotesques," Tyrion replies, "I'd have to disagree ... I hope the boy
does wake. I'd be very interested to hear what he has to say."

Lady Catelyn Stark stands vigil over her unconscious son.
The queen visits and tells the story of an infant she lost to a battle with
fever. She promises to pray to the Mother for Catelyn, who unknowingly thanks
the woman who's responsible for nearly killing her son.

The bastard Jon Snow is preparing to leave for the Wall when Jaime Lannister
approaches him at the forge. He shakes Snow's hand and sneers while thanking
him for protecting the realm against "white walkers and whatnot." Jon
shakes off the insult and visits Arya Stark in her chambers, where she packs
her belongings for the journey to King's Landing. Jon gives her a slender
sword, which she names "Needle." He hugs his half-sister and gives
her a simple primer on swordplay: "Stick them with the pointy end."
Jon visits Bran in his bedchamber to say farewell to the boy, who may never
wake up, as Catelyn glares at him. Ned walks in just in time to hear her order
Jon to leave the room. She tells her husband she can't bear to stay behind
while he rides south again, like he did during the war. But Ned knows there's
no alternative. "You can," he tells her. "You must."
Jon and Ned leave Winterfell with the king's riders, and soon the time comes
for them to part ways. Jon asks his father if his mother is still alive, and
Ned tells him, "Next time we see each other, we'll talk about your mother.
I promise." Ned turns south with the king while Jon follows Benjen and
Tyrion toward the Wall.
On the trip north, Jon meets some other Night's Watch recruits and learns
that the more typical members of the brotherhood are rapers and murderers
who've chosen the Wall over the gallows. Amused but sympathetic, Tyrion asks
Jon if he really believes that the Watch protects the realm from
"grumpkins and snarks" that live beyond the Wall. The young man no
longer has an answer.

Robb Stark and Maester Luwin visit Catelyn in Bran's
room, pressing her to attend to some household business. Robb begs his mother
to leave Bran's side, but before they can finish talking, he notices a fire
burning outside and rushes off. A moment later, a hooded man appears with a
dagger to kill Bran. Cat fends him off, grabbing the weapon's naked blade with
her unprotected fingers, but it's Bran's wolf Summer who saves them, appearing
from nowhere to leap on the assassin and tear open his throat.

After her wounds are dressed, Catelyn meets with Ser
Rodrik Cassel, Theon Greyjoy, Maester Luwin and Robb in Winterfell's Godswood
to discuss the attempt on her life. The expensive dragonbone dagger used in the
attack, along with a golden hair she's found in the tower Bran fell from, leads
her to believe the Lannisters are involved. She and Rodrik decide to ride south
to King's Landing to warn Ned.

Daenerys and her new Dothraki tribe ride east across the
plains of Essos, which takes a physical toll she's unaccustomed to. Dehydrated
and saddle-sore, Daenerys is led off by her handmaidens. Once camp is set, Khal
Drogo comes to Dany's tent and takes her roughly from behind.

Later, her handmaidens tend to all the small wounds she's
collected while riding and tell her the various legends they've heard of
dragons. Doreah, a Lysene woman, worked in the pleasure houses there. Dany asks
Doreah to teach her how to make Drogo "happy," so Doreah shows her
how to take control of a man. "If the khal wanted the Dothraki way,"
the Lysene tells her, "then why did he marry you?" Later, when Drogo
approaches her in his usual coarse way, Daenerys climbs on top of him. Though
he protests at first, after a few moments they find themselves making a
connection for the first time.

Stopping for a meal along the road, Robert and Ned
reminisce over their younger days and the battles and women who filled them.
Robert tells Ned that he's received word that Daenerys Targaryen has wed a
Dothraki horselord. Ned insists she's no threat in Essos, but Robert reminds
him that Lyanna and Brandon Stark both died because of the old royal family.
"I'll kill every Targaryen I get my hands on," he tells Ned.

Sansa enjoys her journey to the capital, especially one
afternoon when Joffrey invites her to take a walk along the Trident River. They
come across Arya and Mycah, the son of a butcher, practicing their
sword-fighting with sticks. Joffrey pulls his own sword - cold steel, rather
than a tree branch - and holds it to the boy's cheek, taunting him. When
Joffrey draws blood, Arya smacks him with her stick. The prince comes after
her, swinging savagely with his sword as she dodges. Her wolf Nymeria jumps in,
biting Joffrey's wrist. Arya throws the prince's dropped sword into the river
and runs off into the forest, where she orders Nymeria away, knowing that
she'll be killed for biting Joffrey.

The Lannisters' men find Arya in the forest that night
and bring her to stand before the king and queen. Ned is furious that his
daughter is being handled by Cersei's family but does his best to control his
tone. Cersei says that Joffrey was an innocent victim, and Arya immediately
protests. The queen calls Sansa forward, and the girl lies and tells the king
that she can't remember what happened. Almost satisfied, Cersei demands that
the wolf be killed, but the creature is nowhere to be found. The matter is
almost settled when Cersei decides Sansa's wolf, Lady, should be put to the
knife in Nymeria's place. Ned is shocked at the obvious injustice and looks to
Robert to overturn the order, but the king walks out. Ned says he'll do the job
himself. "The wolf is of the North," he says. "She deserves
better than a butcher."

Outside, Ned crosses paths with the Sandor Clegane (the
Hound), who is returning with Mycah's corpse slung of his horse's back.
"He ran," the Hound says, "... not very fast." Disgusted,
Ned finds Lady and strokes the animal's coat for a few moments before
unsheathing his dagger and ending her life.

In Bran's chamber back at Winterfell, the injured boy
opens his eyes.

Best Quotes –

1-
Eddard Stark: "There's great honor serving in the Night's Watch. The Starks have manned the Wall for thousands of years, and you are a Stark. You may not have my name, but you have my blood."

Jon: "Is my mother alive? Does she know about me, where I am? where I'm going? Does she care?"
Eddard: "The next time we see each other, we'll talk about your mother. I promise."